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Can you factor y^2+49 using the differences of two squares form? Why or why not?

1 Answer

5 votes

No you can't, because if you were to factor this furthur you wouldn't end up with y^2+49 when checking to see if your factorization works. This could work if the equation is y^2-49 because then when you factor it would look like this:


{y}^(2) - 49 \\ (y - 7)(y + 7) \\

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User Stephen Diehl
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